These keys are 100% legit, and I can offer the matching ISO's as well.

You and others may be interested to know that the way you have described these, they are not "legit" keys. This may be an unintentional misrepresentation. A better term might be "working" keys.

MSDN subscriptions provide working keys to developers for development purposes. They don't use technical enforcement to prevent you from giving the keys away, they use the honor system. They are legit only when used by the developer they are licensed to, and even then, the usage is restricted. Someone who wants a key that "works" will probably be satisfied by these keys (perhaps more than satisfied, most MSDN keys will work for 5-10 activations). Someone who wants their software to be properly licensed for whatever reason won't be getting what they probably think they were promised, as legally, their software is equivalent to being pirated.

Companies claiming they got hacked and lost your coins sounds like fraud so perfect it could be called fashionable. I never believe them. If I ever experience the misfortune of a real intrusion, I declare I have been honest about the way I have managed the keys in Casascius Coins. I maintain no ability to recover or reproduce the keys, not even under limitless duress or total intrusion. Remember that trusting strangers with your coins without any recourse is, as a matter of principle, not a best practice. Don't keep coins online. Use paper or hardware wallets instead.

These keys are 100% legit, and I can offer the matching ISO's as well.

You and others may be interested to know that the way you have described these, they are not "legit" keys. This may be an unintentional misrepresentation. A better term might be "working" keys.

MSDN subscriptions provide working keys to developers for development purposes. They don't use technical enforcement to prevent you from giving the keys away, they use the honor system. They are legit only when used by the developer they are licensed to, and even then, the usage is restricted. Someone who wants a key that "works" will probably be satisfied by these keys (perhaps more than satisfied, most MSDN keys will work for 5-10 activations). Someone who wants their software to be properly licensed for whatever reason won't be getting what they probably think they were promised, as legally, their software is equivalent to being pirated.

True enough, my wording could be determined 'misrepresented'. Though, by legit, I mean the keys I supply will not turn out as "in-use" or false. I mean, of course I know it is 'pirating'. But, I have had a MSDN since 2004, at $1k annualy.. I think I own quite a bit of copies of Microsoft products. But, thank you for your head's up.

These keys are 100% legit, and I can offer the matching ISO's as well.

You and others may be interested to know that the way you have described these, they are not "legit" keys. This may be an unintentional misrepresentation. A better term might be "working" keys.

MSDN subscriptions provide working keys to developers for development purposes. They don't use technical enforcement to prevent you from giving the keys away, they use the honor system. They are legit only when used by the developer they are licensed to, and even then, the usage is restricted. Someone who wants a key that "works" will probably be satisfied by these keys (perhaps more than satisfied, most MSDN keys will work for 5-10 activations). Someone who wants their software to be properly licensed for whatever reason won't be getting what they probably think they were promised, as legally, their software is equivalent to being pirated.